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Allergies May All Be in the Gut, Study Finds
Bugs in the gut may be causing many
allergy symptoms felt in the head, from runny noses to trouble
breathing, researchers said.
And antibiotics could be to blame,
the researchers told a meeting of the American Society for Microbiology.
The findings could help explain
the puzzling rise in asthma and allergies across the developed
world in recent decades, the University of Michigan researchers
said.
Antibiotics kill bacteria, but
they can kill beneficial bacteria living in the intestines and
colon. Many doctors recommend that patients taking antibiotics
also eat "live" yogurt to replace some of these helpful microbes.
"We all have a unique microbial
fingerprint-- a specific mix of bacteria and fungi living in our
stomach and intestines," said Dr. Gary Huffnagle, an associate
professor of internal medicine and of microbiology and immunology
at the University of Michigan.
"Antibiotics knock out bacteria
in the gut, allowing fungi to take over temporarily until the
bacteria grow back after the antibiotics are stopped. Our research
indicates that altering intestinal microflora this way can lead
to changes in the entire immune system, which may produce symptoms
elsewhere in the body."
Experiments on mice suggest that
altering the balance of these so-called intestinal flora can affect
the immune system.
"After antibiotics changed the
mix of microbes in the gastrointestinal tract, the mice developed
an allergic response in the lungs when exposed to common mold
spores," Huffnagle said in a statement. "Mice that didn't receive
the antibiotics were able to fight off the mold spores."
Huffnagle told the meeting that
if the findings also hold true in people, they could help explain
why asthma and allergies are on the rise.
"Anything you inhale, you also
swallow," Huffnagle said in a statement.
"So the immune cells in your GI
(gastrointestinal) tract are exposed directly to airborne allergens
and particulates. This triggers a response from immune cells in
the GI tract to generate regulatory T-cells, which then travel
through the bloodstream searching the body for these antigens."
The immune system cells then block
the development of allergic responses.
When antibiotics wipe out the bacterial
population in the GI tract, yeast and fungi move in and multiply.
Fungi may secrete compounds called
oxylipins, which can control the type and intensity of immune
responses, Huffnagle told the meeting, being held in New Orleans.
Having too many oxylipins may prevent
the development of the regulatory T-cells, in turn allowing for
a hyperactive immune response against allergens such as pollen,
he proposed.
Reference
Source 102
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